Art history nerds, this is for you. In light of the controversies surrounding the Al Wakrah Stadium in Qatar (slave labor, vaginal design, and plans to host the 2022 World Cup), Arch Daily rounds up a list of controversial buildings throughout history. [Arch Daily]

How to get an Art Basel VIP pass: make rich friends. Otherwise “if you have to ask for a VIP pass, you’re probably not going to get one”. You’re not getting one. [artnet News]

Here’s some good news, though: an Art Basel VIP pass gets you into the Margulies Collection, which will donate $10 per VIP. It’s not the all around cut of ticket sales that we wanted, but it’s a step. [artnet News]

Richard Prince is opening his Catskills retreat to the public, like Marfa. [Wall Street Journal]

YouTube had to raise its view counter limit to accommodate the 2.1 billion views of Gangnam Style. There are 7.1 billion people on the planet, suggesting that every person in the developed world has seen this video. [The Verge]

William Powhida tracks what artists can do to, hopefully, make money. It’s not that there isn’t enough money to go around. [Creative Time Reports]

Highlights from Jerry Saltz’s Facebook chat yesterday. He brings donuts to the office every day, and advises, “don’t hide your opinion in one word in the middle of the last paragraph”. Guilty. [Vulture]

The art world is often extravagant. Opening dinners overflow with a cornucopia of earthly delights while paint, temporary walls, and tools get frittered away in the dumpsters outside. Resources like these get squandered all the time, and rarely does anyone raise an eyebrow. It’s surprising, then, to hear about the current trash-related protest against MoMA Poet Laureate and UbuWeb Founder Kenneth Goldsmith for his relatively small, but big-sounding paper-based project “Printing Out the Internet”.